Advertisement

Why Alexa Chung wants you to know she has endometriosis

Alexa Chung at Paris Fashion Week in 2019 (Getty)
Alexa Chung at Paris Fashion Week in 2019 (Getty)

Alexa Chung has endometriosis - a womb tissue condition that affects one in 10 women in the UK - and she wants you to know about it.

The 37-year-old told Refinery29: "It is something we should be talking about and I’m so happy to be in a position where I might affect change, or at least raise awareness. But even saying that, it just feels so personal."

According to the World Endometriosis Research Foundation, it takes an average of eight years for a woman to be diagnosed with endometriosis.

Read more: Don't delay mammogram after coronavirus vaccine, urges charity

"I was diagnosed with a fairly advanced stage but my symptoms aren’t as horrific as they can be for some people. It is a painful disease. It can be excruciating,” the fashion personality-come-designer continued.

According to the NHS, endometriosis is a long-term condition “where tissue similar to the lining of the womb starts to grow in other places, such as the ovaries and fallopian tubes”.

Watch: How to relieve period pain

The main symptoms of endometriosis are:

  • pain in your lower tummy or back (pelvic pain) – usually worse during your period

  • period pain that stops you doing your normal activities

  • pain during or after sex

  • pain when peeing or pooing during your period

  • feeling sick, constipation, diarrhoea, or blood in your pee during your period

  • difficulty getting pregnant

Heavy periods can also be a symptom of the condition, and Chung described it as “a gnawing, dull pain that just wouldn’t go away.”

The pain continued to get worse until she wasn’t able to stand for long periods of time. On getting diagnosed, Chung said she was relieved to know what was causing her symptoms.

Read more: Morrisons launches 'buy one to give one' sanitary product scheme to help fight period poverty

It took a long time for Chung to be diagnosed. “I might have a really intense period, or years ago I went to the doctor to scan my kidneys because I thought there was something wrong with them. Endometriosis is nigh on impossible to diagnose without performing surgery, so you might not know you’ve got it. Which is why I want to talk about it. If other people are experiencing pain and read this, they might feel encouraged to go to the doctor.”

Chung was eventually diagnosed in 2019. A year later she took to Instagram and wrote: “The pain can affect your mental health, ability to work, relationships, your fertility, the list goes on. The only way to officially diagnose that you have it is by performing a laparoscopy. A year ago I put on these snazzy socks in preparation for my laparoscopic surgery.

“Thank you to the doctors who spotted the problem and acted on it. I understand I had the privilege of being believed and listened to.”

The designer said she wanted to speak publicly about her diagnosis as so “few people in the public eye have done so”, and added that the reason she knew about the condition was because she read Lena Dunham's account of her experience with endometriosis.

Read more: Paloma Faith uses cabbage leaves to relieve engorged breasts - does it work?

For women who do have endometriosis the main treatments include painkillers, hormone treatment, surgery to cut away patches of endometriosis tissue and, for very serious cases, some women choose to have a hysterectomy.

While more research needs to be done into the condition, the NHS says that potential causes could be genetics, retrograde menstruation, immune system issues and endometrium cells spreading through the body - but none of these fully explain how or why endometriosis occurs.

For more information on endometriosis, visit nhs.uk/endometriosis

Subscribe to our newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter